INTL 40 years on, Iranians recall 1979 US Embassy hostage crisis

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
https://apnews.com/352409d3e9c34179a0fe9402a7254014

By NASSER KARIMI and ARON HELLER
November 1, 2019

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — For those who were there, the memories are still fresh, 40 years after one of the defining events of Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution, when protesters seized the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and set off a 444-day hostage crisis.

The consequences of that crisis reverberate to this day.

Veteran Iranian photographer Kaveh Kazemi recalled snapping away with his camera as he stood behind the gate where the Iranian militant students would usher blindfolded American hostages to those gathered outside waving anti-American banners and calling for the extradition of the deposed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.

Sometimes they would bring a U.S. flag and burn it, put it in flames and then throw it among the crowd,” said Kazemi, now 67, pointing to the spot. “They would come and chant ‘death to America,’ ‘death to the shah’ ... it changed the world as I knew it.”

Anger toward America had already been growing throughout 1979 as Iran’s revolutionary government took hold, but it boiled over in October when the United States took in the ailing shah for medical treatment.

After several protests, the Islamist students raided the embassy on Nov. 4 and took 98 hostages.

What initially began as a sit-in devolved into 444 days of captivity for 52 Americans seized in the embassy. It prompted President Jimmy Carter to expel Iranian diplomats and launch a failed rescue mission before the Americans were eventually released on the last day of his presidency, setting off decades of hostility amid an Islamic takeover that turned the country from a former U.S. ally into perhaps its greatest adversary.

Many of those sentiments remain today amid the escalating tensions between Tehran and Washington, following the disintegration of Iran’s 2015 nuclear deal and the subsequent U.S. sanctions that have sent the Iranian economy into free fall.

Outside the former embassy’s shaded red brick walls, which were in the process of being painted with anti-U.S. murals for the upcoming anniversary, former protester Hossein Kouhi said he turned out in 1979 to denounce what he called U.S. intervention in Iran’s internal affairs, something he says continues today.

“I had a good feeling then, but we have had a bad fate,” said Kouhi, now 76, as he blamed the U.S for shortages of medicines in Iran because of the sanctions. “Even today, if we allow, it (the U.S.) will come here to plunder Iran, just like it’s doing to other countries in the region. No foreigner is a friend of Iran. They all lie.”

Zahra Tashakori, a 41-year-old schoolteacher, agreed, saying she was glad the American presence was long gone.

“Look at their movies. They promote violence and other bad things in the societies,” she said. “They ruined wherever they intervened in the region. Just look at Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria.”

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, like his predecessor Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, repeatedly hails the militants who took over the embassy as being “ahead of their time.”

Others on the street, though, had a more nuanced view in hindsight.

I believed the U.S. Embassy should have been closed down officially, but not through takeover,” said Ghasem Rabiei, 49. “The U.S. was opposing the Islamic Republic in many ways, so they should have been deported from our country, but peacefully and legally.”

Reza Ghorbani, a 19-year-old engineering student at Tehran’s Azad University, asked: “What is the result of this super long hostility? I do not say the U.S. government is good, but these lengthy bitter relations have damaged Iran, too.”

The U.S. blames Iran for a series of mysterious oil tanker attacks this year and alleges it carried out last month’s attack on the world’s largest oil processor in Saudi Arabia, which caused oil prices to spike by the biggest percentage since the 1991 Gulf War.

Iran denies the accusations and has warned that any retaliatory attack targeting it will result in an “all-out war,” as it has begun enriching uranium beyond the terms of the 2015 nuclear deal between Tehran and world powers. Iran also shot down a U.S. military surveillance drone and seized oil tankers, as the Trump administration insists upon continuing its “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran.

As it does every anniversary, Iran plans to pack the streets outside the former embassy — rebranded as the “Den of Espionage” — for another massive demonstration looking to fuel more anti-American sentiment for at least another year.

For those who witnessed how it all began, it mostly serves as a reminder of all that it’s cost them.

People should not suffer because of the hostilities among the two countries,” said Kazemi, the photographer. “If countries want to kill each other, kill each other. But ordinary people should not suffer. The inflation, the sanctions, everything is affecting all the people every day.”

____

Heller reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Mohammad Nasiri contributed reporting from Tehran.
 

mzkitty

I give up.
And today:


Babak Taghvaee
@BabakTaghvaee
12m12 minutes ago

#BREAKING: Tonight, #Iran's Islamic Regime is tasting what it's terrorists did to #US Embassy in #Tehran exactly 40 years ago on 4 November 1979. Building of #Iran's consulate was set on fire by #Iraqi protesters in #Karbala an hour ago.
#IraqProtests
#IraqiProtests
 

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Ragnarok

On and On, South of Heaven
All I remember about it was the news broke in during the last 20 minutes of the premiere of Battlestar Galactica...

Boy, now THAT pissed me off! I was watching on a little 12 inch black and white and had headphones plugged in so I could pretend to be a fighter pilot with Starbuck and Apollo... I kept watching hoping they would show the last 20 minutes after the news reports. No such luck...
 

vestige

Deceased
I was in Frankfurt, Germany when that happened.

I had (have) a friend/work associate who had overseen the construction of a commissary in Tehran and was at the ribbon cutting for said commissary that day. He watched the Shah cut the ribbon.

That evening after he returned to Frankfurt the commissary was burned to the ground.

You know the rest of the story.
 

JCnKC

Contributing Member
I don’t remember it, but do recall those gas lines, and threats to blow up bridges that would keep traffic stopped for hours.
 

Luddite

Veteran Member
I was too young to remember much. Subsequent reading has me more pissed off about the oil deals Marc rich brokered. Felt darned near apoplectic when Slick Willie pardoned him.

The world is full of people to be pissed off at.... Time for a cup of coffee.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
That episode was the end of Jimmie Carter's presidency. The ensuing drama is what launched Ted Koppel and Night Line. The disastererous rescue attempt made Carter look like a fool. Th release of the hostages took place immediately after Reagan took the oath of office. Then came the rumors of VP GHW Bush's involvement with delaying the release of the hostages until Carter was out of office. It was always a head scratcher.

One of my favorite books of that era was Ken Follett's , On Wings of Eagles. It was about the successful rescues of Ross Perot's EDS employees , two of whom were actually imprisoned and the others were in hiding in Tehran. It is quite the thriller.

Snip:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_Wings_of_Eagles

On Wings of Eagles
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For the 1986 miniseries, see On Wings of Eagles (miniseries).
On Wings of Eagles is a 1983 non-fiction thriller written by British author Ken Follett. Set against the background of the Iranian revolution, it tells the true story of the rescue of Paul Chiapparone and Bill Gaylord from prison in Tehran by a team of Electronic Data Systems executives led by retired Col. Arthur D. Simons.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
https://apnews.com/6149da2418b140c2b1d5b0ca5779bac5

Key moments in the 1979 Iran hostage crisis at US Embassy
By The Associated Press

Here are key moments in the 1979 Iranian takeover and subsequent 444-day hostage crisis at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran.

Day 1, Nov. 4, 1979 - Iranian protesters seize the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and take 98 people hostage. They demand the United States return the deposed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who is in a New York hospital. The U.S. refuses. Khomeini called the takeover “a revolution bigger than the first revolution” that had toppled Iran’s monarchy that February.

Day 2, Nov. 5 - Other followers of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the Iranian leader, seize the British Embassy in Tehran, claiming Britain is America’s “evil” ally. But they give it up hours later.

Day 3, Nov. 6 - Iranian Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan and his Cabinet resign.

Day 5, Nov. 8 - Militants at the U.S. Embassy claim documents found in the embassy prove the American diplomatic personnel were part of an “espionage unit.”

Day 9, Nov. 12 - President Jimmy Carter orders a halt to oil imports from Iran, which provided nearly 4% of daily U.S. consumption.


Day 10, Nov. 13 - The Iranian government calls for a U.N. Security Council meeting to discuss its complaints against the United States.

Day 11, Nov. 14 - All Iranian assets in the United States are frozen on Carter’s orders.

Day 12, Nov. 15 - The embassy militants release one hostage, an Italian cook.

Day 14, Nov. 17 - Khomeini orders the militants to release all women and black hostages if they are absolved of espionage.

Day 15, Nov. 18 - The militants announce they will free 13 hostages - eight black men and five women.

Day 16, Nov. 19 - Three of the hostages - two black Marines and a female secretary - are released.

Day 17, Nov. 20 - Ten more American hostages are freed.

Day 19, Nov. 22 - Five non-American hostages are freed from the U.S. Embassy in Tehran.

Day 25, Nov. 28 - Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, considered a moderate on the hostage issue after having said he didn’t believe they should be held indefinitely, is replaced as foreign minister by Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, who advocates releasing the Americans only after the shah is returned.

Day 29, Dec. 2 - The shah leaves New York for a military hospital near San Antonio, Texas.

Day 30, Dec. 3 - Iranians vote overwhelmingly in favor of a new Islamic constitution giving Khomeini supreme power.

Day 31, Dec. 4 - The U.N. Security Council votes unanimously to urge Iran to free the American hostages.


Day 34, Dec. 7 - In Paris, the shah’s 34-year-old nephew, Shahriar Mustapha Chafik, is shot and killed on the street.

Day 39, Dec. 12 - The U.S. State Department orders the expulsion of 183 Iranian diplomats.

Day 42, Dec. 15 - The shah flies to “temporary” exile in Panama. The International Court at The Hague orders Iran to free all the hostages.

Day 58, Dec. 31 - By a vote of 11-0, with four abstentions, the U.N. Security Council approves a resolution giving Iran until Jan. 7 to release the hostages or face possible sanctions. The hostages aren’t released.

Day 71, Jan. 13, 1980 - Ten of 15 Security Council members vote in favor of economic sanctions against Iran but the Soviet Union, as a permanent member, vetoes the resolution. The United States decides on sanctions of its own.

Day 72, Jan. 14 - Iran’s Revolutionary Council orders all U.S. news correspondents to leave Iran because of what it calls their “biased reporting.”

Day 83, Jan. 25 - Presidential election day in Iran. U.S. officials express hope the election will change the tone of the hostage crisis. Bani-Sadr ends up winning.

Day 87, Jan. 29 - It is disclosed that six Americans, who escaped capture when the U.S. Embassy was seized Nov. 4, had slipped out of Iran with help of the Canadian Embassy, which issued them false identities. Decades later, the U.S. acknowledged the CIA’s role in their escape, which was the subject of the 2012 film “Argo.”

Day 140, March 22 - Khomeini says Carter confidentially writes to him promising to recognize Islamic Revolution in a public speech.

Day 141, March 23 - The shah leaves Panama for Egypt, ending a 100-day residence on a resort island.

Day 142, March 24 - Looking haggard, the shah arrives in Egypt where he began his exile in January 1979 and is greeted by President Anwar Sadat, who says he can stay permanently. The shah enters a Cairo hospital.

Day 146, March 28 - The shah undergoes surgery for the removal of his spleen.

Day 156, April 7 - Khomeini rules the hostages must remain in the hands of the militants. In response, the United States breaks diplomatic relations with Iran, expelling 35 diplomats remaining in the country and imposing a series of economic sanctions. Iran’s army is put on alert after forces of neighboring Iraq attack an Iranian border post and nearby oil facilities. Iran orders its diplomats home from Iraq.

Day 158, April 8 - An angered Khomeini calls the United States “bloodthirsty” but tells his people the U.S. break in relations and other actions are a “good omen” because they mean the U.S. has lost all hope of controlling Iran. Bani-Sadr says, however, “I tell the nation, it is a war.”

Day 158, April 9 - As Washington hints of a possible naval blockade of Iran, the militants say they will burn the U.S. Embassy and kill the hostages if the United States tries “even the smallest” military move against Iran.

Day 165, April 16 - A senior U.S. official says Iran has until mid-May to end the deadlock or face possible military pressure.

Day 166, April 17 - President Carter imposes more economic sanctions on Iran, bans travel there by Americans except news correspondents and says military action could be the next step if the hostages are not released.

Day 172, April 23 - Japan and Canada join in economic and diplomatic sanctions against Iran. Iran announces new trade accords with the Soviet Union, Romania and East Germany.

Day 174, April 25 - The White House announces a U.S. military force flew to a remote desert in Iran in hopes to carrying out a rescue of the hostages in Tehran but the plan had to be aborted because of the failure of three helicopters. Eight American servicemen are killed in a ground collision of a C-130 and a helicopter as the aircraft were preparing to leave the area.

Day 175, April 26 - Iran announces the hostages are being moved from the U.S. Embassy to other parts of Tehran and to other Iranian cities to foil another U.S. rescue effort. Iranians recover the bodies of the eight Americans killed on the rescue mission.

Day 176, April 27 - Iranians display bodies of eight U.S. servicemen at U.S. Embassy compound in Tehran.

Day 182, May 3 - The U.S. hostages complete a half year in captivity. Iran arranges for the return of the bodies of Americans killed in the aborted rescue mission.

Day 203, May 24 - The International Court of Justice calls for release of the hostages and says Iran should compensate the United States for the seizure. Iran dismisses the ruling.

Day 224, June 14 - Khomeini announces a Cultural Revolution “to finish the enemies of God,” wipe out remnants of Iranian life as it was under the shah and put Islamic clergymen in charge of education.

Day 225, June 15 - Khomeini orders a purge of non-Muslims from Iran’s state-run radio and television.

Day 238, June 28 - The shah is reported in “very serious” condition in a Cairo hospital, suffering from pneumonia which resulted from chemotherapy for his cancer condition.

Day 243, July 3 - The shah again is described as being in serious condition in Cairo. His affliction this time is reported as a typhoidal infection.

Day 245, July 5 - About 2,000 women wearing black mourning dresses demonstrate outside the presidential office to protest new rules requiring government employees to wear traditional Islamic clothing on the job.

Day 250, July 10 - Khomeini orders the release of hostage Richard Queen, a 28-year-old vice consul, who is ill.

Day 258, July 18 - An attempt is made in Paris to assassinate Shahpour Bakhtiar, the last Iranian prime minister under the shah and leader of an anti-Khomeini exile movement. Bakhtiar is unharmed but a French policeman and woman neighbor are killed.

Day 267, July 27 - The shah dies in a Cairo military hospital. Tehran rejoices but U.S. officials express doubt the death will speed the release of the hostages.

Day 269, July 29 - The shah is buried in a Cairo mosque after a state funeral attended by President Sadat and former President Richard Nixon, there in a private capacity.

Day 288, Aug. 17 - Britain temporarily closes its embassy in Tehran “as a precautionary measure” because of tensions over the arrests of Iranian demonstrators in London. Eight of the embassy’s diplomatic personnel leave Iran.

Day 299, Aug. 28 - Amnesty International, the London-based human rights organization, says its investigations indicate that more than 1,000 people were executed in the first 18 months of the Islamic Revolution.

Day 311, Sept. 9 - Britain closes its embassy in Tehran, fearing retaliation by Iranians who claim Iranians were ill-treated in London.

Day 314, Sept. 12 - Khomeini lists four conditions for the hostages’ release but omits a previous demand for a U.S. apology. The conditions: return of the late shah’s wealth, cancellation of U.S. claims against Iran, unfreezing of Iranian funds in the United States and U.S. guarantees of no interference in Iran. Washington’s immediate reaction is guarded.

Day 321, Sept. 19 - Air and ground battles break out between Iran and Iraq.

Day 324, Sept. 22 - Iraq says the border hostilities have become a “full-scale war.” It launches air attacks on at least seven Iranian air installations, including one in Tehran.

Day 330, Sept. 28 - U.N. Security Council votes unanimously to call for a halt to the fighting between Iraq and Iran.

Day 341, Oct. 9 - Radio Tehran says Iraqi missile attacks kill 180 people and wound 300 others in two Iranian cities -- the highest casualty toll so far reported in a single day of the war.

Day 363, Oct. 31 - Radio Tehran says Iran has been victorious in the hostage crisis and a “just method” for freeing the captives has been worked out. A Swedish airliner is reported on standby to fly the Americans from Tehran. The White House continues to caution against over-optimism.

Day 365, Nov. 2 - Parliament votes to free the hostages if the United States meets conditions set by Khomeini and a parliamentary committee: Release of Iranian assets frozen in U.S. banks, return of the late shah’s wealth, withdrawal of lawsuits pending against Iran and a U.S. pledge of non-intervention in Iranian affairs. President Carter says the terms “appear to offer a positive basis” for negotiations.

Day 366, Nov. 3 - With Ayatollah Khomeini’s approval, the militants relinquish “responsibility” for the hostages to the Iranian government. U.S. officials call it a major breakthrough.

Day 367, Nov. 4 - Tens of thousands of Iranians demonstrate outside the U.S. Embassy to mark the first anniversary of its capture. Iran’s Foreign Ministry demands a quick Carter administration response to Iran’s terms for the hostages’ release. Ronald Reagan defeats President Carter in a landslide vote.

Day 373, Nov. 10 - Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher leads a party of Americans to Algiers and delivers the U.S. hostage reply to Algerian envoys who will relay it to Tehran.

Day 414, Dec. 21 - Iran announces the United States must deposit with the Algerians the equivalent of $24 billion in cash and gold representing its estimate of the shah’s wealth and frozen Iranian assets - before the hostages are released. The U.S. calls the demand “unreasonable.”

Day 427, Jan. 3, 1981 - Radio Tehran says it is “totally improbable” the hostages will be freed before Reagan’s inauguration and that even after that the issue “will remain as it is now, at an impasse,” unless the United States meets Iranian demands.

Day 428, Jan. 4 - The Iranian government claims it now has full control of the 52 hostages, who had been under the control of the militants who seized them.

Day 435, Jan. 11 - Iran drops its demand that the United States deposit $24 billion in Algerian banks.

Day 438, Jan. 14 - The Iranian parliament passes a key bill on the hostage question, authorizing third-country arbitration of conflicting U.S.-Iranian financial claims.

Day 440, Jan. 16 - A U.S. Air Force jet flies U.S. and British bankers to Algiers to work out with American negotiators already there the financial arrangements sought by Iran. The United States sends the draft of a proposed agreement to Iran and the White House says if it is accepted the hostages could be free before Carter leaves office.

Day 442, Jan. 18 - Iran announces acceptance of agreement for the release of the hostages. Final details are worked out in Algeria for the transfer of Iranian funds frozen by the United States. Plans are made to fly the hostages to West Germany.

Day 443, Jan. 19 - The release of the hostages is delayed by complications in financial aspects of the U.S.-Iran agreement.

Day 444, Jan. 20 - The financial complications are resolved and the hostages are released as Reagan takes office as president.
 
Day 174, April 25 - The White House announces a U.S. military force flew to a remote desert in Iran in hopes to carrying out a rescue of the hostages in Tehran but the plan had to be aborted because of the failure of three helicopters. Eight American servicemen are killed in a ground collision of a C-130 and a helicopter as the aircraft were preparing to leave the area.

I was in Basic/AIT at Ft. Sill then. The day after that happened the Drill Sgt's got us all together and told us what they knew, and they were pissed. We didn't have tv's in Basic then. They told us were all going to war and to get ready.
 

GenErik

Veteran Member
I was friends with several Iranian students who had gone to my high school (we'd all graduated earlier that year).

I remember being threatened when I was spending time with them.
 
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